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Webster 1913 Edition
Twire
Twire
,Twire
,Twire
,Webster 1828 Edition
Twire
TWIRE
,Definition 2024
twire
twire
English
Alternative forms
Verb
twire (third-person singular simple present twires, present participle twiring, simple past and past participle twired)
- (intransitive) To glance shyly or slyly; look askance; make eyes; leer; peer; pry.
- Beaumont and Fletcher
- I saw the wench that twired and twinkled at thee.
- Ben Jonson
- Which maids will twire 'tween their fingers.
- Beaumont and Fletcher
- (intransitive) To twinkle; sparkle; wink.
- Shakespeare
- When sparkling stars twire not.
- Shakespeare
Noun
twire (plural twires)
Etymology 2
From Middle English *twir, *twirn, from Old English *twirn, *tweorn (“twine, thread”), from Proto-Germanic *twiznaz (“thread”), from Proto-Indo-European *duwo- (“two”). Cognate with Dutch tweern (“thread”), German Zwirn (“thread, twine”), Old English twīn (“twine”). More at twine.
Noun
twire (plural twires)
Etymology 3
Perhaps from a dialectal form of *twere, from Middle English *tweren, from Old English þweran (“to stir”) (found in compound āþweran (“to agitate, stir”)), from Proto-Germanic *þweraną (“to stir”), from Proto-Indo-European *twer- (“to turn, twirl, swirl, move”). Cognate with Bavarian zweren (“to stir”). Compare twirk, twirl.
Verb
twire (third-person singular simple present twires, present participle twiring, simple past and past participle twired)
- (transitive) To twist; twirl.
Etymology 4
Variant of tuyere.
Noun
twire (plural twires)